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Claire Keegan and the art of subtraction 

HoCoPoLitSo
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In this 2010 edition of HoCoPoLItSo's The Writing LIfe, poet and musician Terence Winch talks with Claire Keegan, author of two short story collections, Walk the Blue Fields (2007) and Antarctica (1999), about the origin of her work, her influences and her background growing up on an Irish farm. Keegan started reading American literature when she arrived in America from Ireland at age 17.
Winch suggests that like Flannery O'Connor, Keegan works by subtraction, less in telling than in what isn't told. Keegan agrees. "There is only so much you say as a writer and then you must rely quite heavily on the reader and their own consciousness and their own mysteries and their own private lives to explore the mystery of what is not said within the given story. It's one of the glorious reasons why we read." Keegan ends the program by reading from "Foster," the story published in the Feb. 15, 2010, issue of The New Yorker, about a young girl sent to live with her mother's cousin for a summer.
For more information about HoCoPoLitSo (the Howard County Poetry and Literature Society) and the live and taped programs it presents, visit www.hocopolitso.org.

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19 июн 2024

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Комментарии : 13   
@eltallerdeingles6111
@eltallerdeingles6111 2 года назад
I'm mesmerized by Claire Keegan's prose. Huge writer.
@janiceslater5547
@janiceslater5547 Год назад
A wonderful novelist. Glad to see this early interview. Thank you.
@MrUndersolo
@MrUndersolo Год назад
I just bought 'Small Things Like These' and I plan on reading a lot more. Thank you for this!
@hocopolitso
@hocopolitso 11 лет назад
I'm glad you enjoyed Ms. Keegan's interview -- she really is fascinating. I can't wait for her novel to come out. If you enjoyed this show, try watching our piece on Colm Toibin -- another Irish novelist with an eye on the inner workings of the human heart. And if you'd like to support the live or taped programs that HoCoPoLitSo produces, visit our web site, listed in the program notes.
@neotropic
@neotropic 2 года назад
Such an interesting author!
@winnieewing7730
@winnieewing7730 Месяц назад
Lovely woman wish she would smile ❤
@Billcampbell1
@Billcampbell1 8 лет назад
Wonderful
@hocopolitso
@hocopolitso 8 лет назад
+Bill Campbell Thanks for watching. I'm eagerly awaiting her next work! If you enjoyed this show, perhaps an Irish-American novelist might interest you, our show with Alice McDermott, or another Irish novelist, Anne Enright.
@michaeldunne3379
@michaeldunne3379 2 месяца назад
Those who say her stories are old fashioned might be forgetting that Ireland is still predominantly rural. As Terence Winch says here, the word those people are looking for is ‘timeless’.
@63jmur
@63jmur 11 лет назад
Great interview, Claire is a great writer, but that guy who inteviewed her needs to take some prozak or something, jesus!
@michellemaher2010
@michellemaher2010 4 года назад
As unimpressive as the interviewer is, meeting Claire Keegan a few years ago was worse. Her writing had a huge impact on me, but in person she was cold and aloof.
@michellemaher2010
@michellemaher2010 2 года назад
@@BSyn-ei4uv It was a book signing, she was impolite. People are entitled to their opinions.
@user-wm2fv3sp3x
@user-wm2fv3sp3x 3 месяца назад
​@michellemaher2010 Some writers are good at writing but not good at publicity. Some even fear it or hate it. Writing is a solitary profession. Some writers are just solitary and quieter by nature. Perhaps Claire Keegan is one of them. And anyone can have a bad day. Speak for myself, I am satisfied and happy just to read her works.
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